Dinesh D'Souza is accused of giving too
much money to a candidate who sought to replace former New York Sen.
Hillary Clinton. Producer Gerald Molen tells The Hollywood Reporter the
charges are politically motivated.

Conservative filmmaker Dinesh D'Souza, whose documentary 2016: Obama's America took a critical look at President Barack Obama and was a surprise hit in 2012, will be arrested in New York on Friday for allegedly violating campaign-finance laws, The Hollywood Reporter has learned. Federal authorities accuse D'Souza of donating more than is legal to the campaign of Wendy Long, who ran in 2012 for the U.S. Senate seat vacated by Hillary Clinton but lost to now-Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand. Long, though, is not mentioned in an indictment obtained by THR on Thursday. Insiders say D'Souza has been friends with Long since they attended
Dartmouth College together in the early 1980s. According to the
indictment, D'Souza donated $20,000 to Long's campaign by aggregating
the money from various people and falsely reporting the source of the
funds. But Gerald Molen, a co-producer of 2016, says the charge is politically motivated. "In America, we have a long tradition of not doing what is commonly
done in too many other countries -- criminalizing dissent through the
selective enforcement of the law," Molen tells THR.STORY: Jeffrey Katzenberg's Secret Call to Hillary Clinton: Hollywood's 2016 Support Assured D'Souza first learned he was being investigated in the middle of 2013, several months after 2016
had earned $33 million at the box office and become the
second-most-popular political documentary in U.S. history. The film
included an interview with Obama's half-brother, George Obama, who was mildly critical of the president. Molen says D'Souza is being singled out for "an alleged minor
violation" in the same way the IRS reportedly targeted conservative Tea
Party groups for retribution. "In light of the recent events and the way
the IRS has been used to stifle dissent, this arrest should send
shivers down the spines of all freedom-loving Americans," Molen says. D'Souza was in San Diego working on his next film and book, each to be called America,
when he was informed he was about to be indicted and that he should fly
to New York and turn himself in to authorities. The indictment came
late Thursday, according to those with knowledge of the situation. D'Souza's upcoming film America is due in theaters July 4 and is co-produced by Molen, who won a best picture Oscar for Schindler's List, and Gray Frederickson, who won a best picture Oscar for The Godfather Part II. D'Souza wrote and stars in the film, which is directed by John Sullivan. The filmmakers emailed a statement to THR vowing to release the film on schedule.FILM REVIEW: 2016: Obama's America "We believe this is an unfortunate misunderstanding arising out of
Dinesh D'Souza's desire to help the uphill campaign of a friend," the
statement reads. "There was no intent to do anything illegal or corrupt
in any way. This will have no impact on the film America, which
will be released on the Fourth of July this year as previously
announced. Filming is on schedule and D'Souza will continue to lead the
enterprise." Sources say D'Souza has been cooperating with authorities. He will
surrender Friday for processing and be arraigned in the Southern
District of New York.Benjamin Brafman, an attorney for D'Souza, tells THR that
his client "did not act with any corrupt or criminal intent whatsoever
... at worst this was an act of misguided friendship by D'Souza."Molen added: "When American citizens begin to suspect that people are
being arrested for alleged minor violations because of their vocal
dissent against their elected representatives or rulers, it breeds
disrespect and contempt for the law and suspicion of those officials. …
If this unfortunate action against Dinesh is intended to deter the
release of his upcoming film, America, that effort will fail."